News

MLS expands rosters, relaunches Reserve Division

NEW YORK – The 2010 season is the first in which homegrown
players have left their mark in MLS.

D.C. United’s Andy Najar became the youngest Rookie of the Year
in US pro sports history, New York’s Juan Agudelo earned a US national team
call-up at 17, and 19-year-old Tristan Bowen made an important contribution to
the LA Galaxy’s Supporters’ Shield run.

Now the league's player development movement is poised for an even more aggressive push with the launch of the Reserve Division and the unveiling
of new roster rules by MLS.

Teams can now sign an unlimited number of homegrown players
per season and they have more spots to fit them with squad rosters expanding from 26 to 30 beginning in 2011. The additional four spots will not
count toward a team's salary budget.

MLS Commissioner Don Garber also announced the relaunch of
the Reserve Division, where young players will be able to cut their teeth in
competitive matches while continuing to train with the first team squad.

MLS Golden Boot winner Chris Wondolowski and Colorado Rapids forward Omar Cummings both enjoyed breakout seasons in 2010, two years after honing their game in four years of Reserve Division action from 2005 through 2008.

“It’s safe to say that rising stars like Chris Wondolowski and Omar
Cummings would not be in MLS today if not for the previous Reserve
Division,” Garber said. “Their paths to success illustrate the value of
this initiative."

Several MLS clubs have already made a significant investment
in youth academies and the moves unveiled on Tuesday are designed to incentivize an even greater
emphasis on youth development.

DP, short for Designated Player, has been the most talked
about acronym in recent years. But it’s PD, as in Player Development, which continues to build momentum.